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Lok Sabha

Coordinates:28°37′3″N77°12′30″E / 28.61750°N 77.20833°E /28.61750; 77.20833
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From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Lower house of the Parliament of India
For the upper house, seeRajya Sabha. For current list of Lok Sabha members, seeList of members of the 18th Lok Sabha.

Lok Sabha
18th Lok Sabha
Type
Type
Term limits
Maximum 5 years
Leadership
Om Birla, BJP
since 17 June 2019
Vacant
since 23 June 2019
Narendra Modi, BJP
since 26 May 2014
Rahul Gandhi, INC
since 9 June 2024
Utpal Kumar Singh
since 30 November 2020
Structure
Seats543
By party
By alliance
Political groups
Government (293)

  NDA (293)

Opposition (234)
  INDIA (234)

  Other Opposition (15)

  Vacant (1)

  •   Vacant (1)
Length of term
5 years
Elections
First-past-the-post voting
First election
25 October 1951 – 21 February 1952
Last election
19 April – 1 June 2024
Next election
By April 2029
Meeting place
Lok Sabha Chamber,Sansad Bhavan,
118, Rafi Marg,New Delhi,Delhi, India – 110001
28°37′3″N77°12′30″E / 28.61750°N 77.20833°E /28.61750; 77.20833
Website
sansad.in/ls
Constitution
Constitution of India
Rules
The Rules of Procedure and Conduct of Business in Lok Sabha (English)

TheLok Sabha, also known as theHouse of the People, is thelower house of thebicameralParliament of India, where theupper house isRajya Sabha.Members of the Lok Sabha are elected by an adultuniversal suffrage and afirst-past-the-post system to represent their respectiveconstituencies, and they hold their seats for five years or until the body is dissolved by thepresident of India on the advice of theunion council of ministers. The house meets in the Lok Sabha chamber of theParliament House inNew Delhi.

The maximum membership of the house as allotted by theConstitution of India is 552 before the abolition of Anglo-Indian seats, currently it is 550.[1] As of 2025, the house has 543 elected members. Between 1952 and 2020,two additional members of theAnglo-Indian community were nominated by the president of India on the advice of theIndian government, and the practice was abolished in January 2020 by the104th amendment to the Indian constitution.[2][3] The new parliament has a maximum seating capacity for 888 members in Lok Sabha.[4]

About 131 seats (24.03%) are reserved for representatives ofscheduled castes (84) andscheduled tribes (47). Thequorum for the House is 10% of the total membership the house. Unless dissolved sooner, the house continues to operate for five years from the date of its first meeting. However, when astate of emergency in India is declared, this period may be extended by the parliament of India by law or decree.[5][6] The18th Lok Sabha is the latest to be elected in May 2024.[7] The Lok Sabha proceedings are televised live onSansad TV, operating from within the parliament premises.[8]

An exercise to redraw the boundaries of the Lok Sabha constituencies is carried out by thedelimitation commission. It is carried out every decade based on thecensus of India, the last of which was conducted in2011.[9] This provision was temporarily suspended between 1976 and 2001 following aconstitutional amendment to incentivize the family planning program which was being implemented.[10] The elections for the seats are conducted by theelection commission.

History

A major portion of theIndian subcontinent was underBritish rule from 1858 to 1947.[11] During this period, the office of theSecretary of State for India (along with theCouncil of India) was the authority through whomBritish Parliament exercised its rule in the Indian sub-continent, and the office ofViceroy of India was created, along with an Executive Council in India, consisting of high officials of the British government. TheIndian Councils Act 1861 provided for a Legislative Council consisting of the members of the Executive Council and non-official members. TheIndian Councils Act 1892 established legislatures in each of theprovinces of British India and increased the powers of the Legislative Council. Although these Acts increased the representation of Indians in the government, their power remained limited, and the electorate very small. TheIndian Councils Act 1909 admitted someIndians to the various councils. TheGovernment of India Act 1919 further expanded the participation of Indians in the administration, creating theCentral Legislative Assembly, for whichParliament House, New Delhi, was built and opened in 1927.[12]

TheGovernment of India Act 1935 introduced provincial autonomy and proposed a federal structure in India.[13] TheIndian Independence Act 1947, passed by the British parliament on 18 July 1947, divided British India (which did not include thePrincely states) into two newly independent countries, India and Pakistan, which were to bedominions underthe Crown until they had each enacted a new constitution. The Constituent Assembly was divided into two for the separate nations, with each new Assembly having sovereign powers transferred to it for the respective dominion.[citation needed]

The Constitution of India was adopted on 26 November 1949 and came into effect on 26 January 1950, proclaiming India to be a sovereign, democratic republic. This contained the founding principles of the law of the land which would govern India in its new form, which now included all the princely states which had notacceded to Pakistan.[citation needed]

According toArticle 79 (Part V-The Union.) of the Constitution of India, the Parliament of India consists of the President of India and the two Houses of Parliament known as the Council of States (Rajya Sabha) and the House of the People (Lok Sabha).[14]

The Lok Sabha (House of the People) was duly constituted for the first time on 17 April 1952 after the first General Elections held from 25 October 1951 to 21 February 1952.[15]

List

Formation of Lok Sabha over time[16][17][18][19]
Lok SabhaCommencement DateDissolution DateDurationPrime MinisterDeputy Prime Minister
First13 May 19524 April 19574 years, 10 months and 22 daysJawaharlal NehruVacant
Second10 May 195731 March 19624 years, 10 months and 21 days
Third16 April 19623 March 19674 years, 10 months and 15 daysJawaharlal Nehru,Lal Bahadur Shastri andIndira Gandhi
Fourth16 March 196727 December 19703 years, 9 months and 11 daysIndira GandhiMoraji Desai (till 1969)
Fifth19 March 197118 January 19775 years, 9 months and 30 daysVacant
Sixth25 March 197722 August 19792 years, 4 months and 28 daysMorarji Desai andCharan SinghCharan Singh,Jagjivan Ram andYashwantrao Chavan
Seventh21 January 198031 December 19844 years, 11 months and 10 daysIndira Gandhi andRajiv GandhiVacant
Eighth15 January 198527 November 19894 years, 10 months and 12 daysRajiv Gandhi
Ninth18 December 198913 March 19911 year, 2 months and 23 daysV. P. Singh andChandra ShekharDevi Lal
Tenth9 July 199110 May 19964 years, 10 months and 1 dayP. V. Narasimha RaoVacant
Eleventh22 May 19964 December 19971 year, 6 months and 12 daysAtal Bihari Vajpayee,H. D. Deve Gowda andI. K. Gujral
Twelfth23 March 199826 April 19991 year, 1 month and 3 daysAtal Bihari Vajpayee
Thirteenth20 October 19996 February 20044 years, 3 months and 17 daysLal Krishna Advani
Fourteenth2 June 200418 May 20094 years, 11 months and 16 daysManmohan SinghVacant
Fifteenth1 June 200918 May 20144 years, 11 months and 17 days
Sixteenth4 June 201424 May 20194 years, 11 months and 20 daysNarendra Modi
Seventeenth17 June 20195 June 20244 years, 11 months and 19 days
Eighteenth24 June 2024present1 year, 5 months and 2 days

Qualifications

See also:Election Commission of India

Article 84 (under Part V. – The Union)[20] of Indian Constitution sets qualifications for being a member of Lok Sabha, which are as follows:

  1. They should be a citizen of India, and must subscribe before theElection Commission of India, an oath or affirmation according to the form set out for the purpose in theThird Schedule of theIndian Constitution.
  2. They should not be less than 25 years of age.
  3. They possess other such qualifications as may be prescribed in that behalf by or under any law made by theParliament.
  4. They should not be proclaimed criminal i.e. they should not be a convict, a confirmed debtor or otherwise disqualified by law; and
  5. They should have their name in the electoral rolls in any part of the country.

However, a member can be disqualified from being a member of Parliament:

  1. If they hold the office of profit;
  2. If they are of unsound mind and stand so declared by a competent court
  3. If they are an undischarged insolvent;
  4. If they are not a citizen of India, or have voluntarily acquired the citizenship of a foreign State, or are under any acknowledgement of allegiance or adherence to a foreign State;
  5. If they are violating party discipline (as per the Tenth Schedule of the constitution); disqualified underRepresentation of People Act.

A seat in the Lok Sabha will become vacant in the following circumstances (during the normal functioning of the House):

  1. When the holder of the seat, by writing to thespeaker, resigns.
  2. When the holder of the seat is absent from 60 consecutive days of proceedings of the House, without prior permission of the Speaker.
  3. When the holder of the seat is subject to any disqualifications mentioned in the Constitution or any law enacted by Parliament.
  4. A seat may also be vacated when the holder stands disqualified under the 'Anti-Defection Law'.

Furthermore, as perarticle 101 (Part V.—The Union)[21] of the Indian Constitution, a person cannot be:

  1. A member of both Houses of Parliament and provision shall be made by Parliament by law for the vacation by a person who is chosen a member of both Houses of his seat in one House or the other.
  2. A member both of Parliament and of a House of the Legislature of a State.

System of elections in Lok Sabha

Members of the Lok Sabha are directly elected by the people of India, based onuniversal suffrage. Elections are by the people directly to the Lok Sabha and each state is divided into territorial constituencies under two provisions of the Constitution:

  1. Each state is allotted several seats in the Lok Sabha in such a manner that the ratio between that number and its population was as close to uniform as possible. This provision does not apply to states having a population of less than 6 million. The number of seats per state has been frozen under the constitutional amendment of 1976.
  2. Each state is divided into territorial constituencies in such a manner that the ratio between the population of eachconstituency and the number of seats allotted to it (in each case, one) remain the same throughout the state. This principle is upheld by the boundary reviews mentioned above.

Notes:

  1. The expression "population" while distributing seats among states refers to the population ascertained at thecensus of 1971, per the Constitutional Amendment of 1976.[22]
  2. The expression "population" while distributing constituencies within a state refers to the population ascertained at the census of 2011.[22]

Powers

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The Lok Sabha has certain powers that make it more powerful than the Rajya Sabha.

  • Motions of no confidence against thegovernment can be introduced and passed in the Lok Sabha. If passed by a majority vote, thePrime Minister and theCouncil of Ministers resign collectively. The Rajya Sabha has no power over such a motion and hence has no real power over the executive. This is because the Constitution of India has only made the Union Council of ministers responsible to the Lok Sabha, not to the Rajya Sabha.
  • Money bills can only be introduced in the Lok Sabha, and upon being passed, are sent to theRajya Sabha, where it can be deliberated on for up to 14 days. If not rejected by the Rajya Sabha, or 14 days lapse from the introduction of the bill in the Rajya Sabha without any action by the House, or recommendations made by the Rajya Sabha are not accepted by the Lok Sabha, the bill is considered passed. Thebudget is presented in the Lok Sabha by theFinance Minister in the name of the President of India.
  • In matters about non-financial (ordinary) bills, after the bill has been passed by the House where it was originally tabled (Lok Sabha or Rajya Sabha), it is sent to the other house, where it may be kept for a maximum period of 6 months. If the other House rejects the bill or a period of 6 months elapses without any action by that House, or the House that originally tabled the bill does not accept the recommendations made by the members of the other house, it results in a deadlock. This is resolved by a joint session of both Houses, presided over by the speaker of the Lok Sabha and decided by asimple majority. Though the Constitution has placed both houses on the same footing in this regard, in reality, it is the Lok Sabha's opinions that mostly prevail—due to its bigger numerical strength.
  • Equal Powers with the Rajya Sabha in initiating and passing anyBill for Constitutional Amendment (by a majority of the total membership of the House and at least two-thirds majority of the members present and voting).
  • Equal Powers with the Rajya Sabha in initiating and passing a motion for theimpeachment of the President (by two-thirds of the membership of the House).
  • Equal Powers with the Rajya Sabha in the impeachment process (initiating and passing a motion for the removal) of the judges of the Supreme Court and the state High Courts (by a majority of the membership of the House and at least two-thirds majority of the members present and voting), who then can be removed by the President of India.
  • Equal Powers with the Rajya Sabha in initiating and passing a resolution declaring war or national emergency (by two-thirds majority) or constitutional emergency (by simple majority) in a state.
  • If the Lok Sabha is dissolved before or after the declaration of aNational Emergency, the Rajya Sabha becomes the sole Parliament. It cannot be dissolved. This is a limitation on the Lok Sabha. But there is a possibility that the president can exceed the term to not more than 1 year under the proclamation of emergency and the same would be lowered down to six-month if the said proclamation ceases to operate.

In conclusion, the Lok Sabha is more powerful than the Rajya Sabha in almost all matters. Even in those matters in which the Constitution has placed both Houses on an equal footing, the Lok Sabha has more influence due to its greater numerical strength. This is typical of parliamentary democracies, many of which have a lower house that is more powerful than the upper.

Procedure

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Procedure in the House

The Rules of Procedure and Conduct of Business in Lok Sabha and Directions issued by the Speaker from time to time there under regulate the procedure in Lok Sabha. The items of business, a notice of which is received from the Ministers/ Private Members and admitted by the Speaker, are included in the daily List of Business which is printed and circulated to members in advance.

Sessions

The period during which the House meets to conduct its business is called a session. The Constitution empowers the President to summon each House at such intervals that there should not be more than a six-month gap between the two sessions. Hence the Parliament must meet at least twice a year. But, three sessions of Lok Sabha are held in a year:

  • Budget session: February to May.
  • Monsoon session: July to September.
  • Winter session: November to mid-December.

When in session, Lok Sabha holds its sittings usually from 11 a.m. to 1 p.m. and from 2 p.m. to 6 p.m. On some days the sittings are continuously held without observing lunch break and are also extended beyond 6 p.m. depending upon the business before the House. Lok Sabha does not ordinarily sit on Saturdays and Sundays and other closed holidays.

Question Hour

The first hour of every sitting is calledQuestion Hour. Asking questions in Parliament is the free and unfettered right of members, and during Question Hour they may ask questions of ministers on different aspects of administration and government policy in the national and international spheres. Every minister whose turn it is to answer questions has to stand up and answer for his department's acts of omission or commission.

Questions are of three types—Starred, Unstarred, and Short Notice. A Starred Question is one to which a member desires an oral answer in the House and which is distinguished by an asterisk mark. An unstarred question is not called for oral answer in the house and on which no supplementary questions can consequently be asked. An answer to such a question is given in writing. A minimum period of notice for starred/unstarred questions is 10 clear days. If the questions given notice are admitted by the Speaker, they are listed and printed for an answer on the dates allotted to the Ministries to which the subject matter of the question pertains.

The normal period of notice does not apply to short-notice questions that relate to matters of urgent public importance. However, a short-notice question may be answered only on short notice if so permitted by the Speaker and the Minister concerned is prepared to answer it at shorter notice. A short-notice question is taken up for answer immediately after the Question Hour, popularly known as Zero Hour.

Zero Hour

The time immediately following the Question Hour has come to be known as "Zero Hour". It starts at around noon (hence the name) and members can, with prior notice to the Speaker, raise issues of importance during this time. Typically, discussions on important Bills, the Budget, and other issues of national importance take place from 2 p.m. onwards.

Business after Question Hour

After the Question Hour, the House takes up miscellaneous items of work before proceeding to the main business of the day. These may consist of one or more of the following: Adjournment Motions, Questions involving breaches of Privileges, Papers to be laid on the Table, Communication of any messages from Rajya Sabha, Intimations regarding President's assent to Bills, Calling Attention Notices, Matters under Rule 377, Presentation of Reports of Parliamentary Committee, Presentation of Petitions, miscellaneous statements by Ministers, Motions regarding elections to Committees, Bills to be withdrawn or introduced.

Main business

The main business of the day may be consideration of a bill or financial business or consideration of a resolution or a motion.

Legislative business

Legislative proposals in the form of a bill can be brought forward either by a minister or by an individual member. In the former case, it is known as a government bill and in the latter case, it is known as a private members' bill. Every bill passes through three stages—each called readings—before it is passed. To become law it must be passed by both the houses of Parliament, the Lok Sabha and the Rajya Sabha, and then assented to by the president.

Financial business

The presentation, discussion of, and voting on the annual general and railways budgets—followed by the passing of the appropriations Bill and the finance bill—is a long, drawn-out process that takes up a major part of the time of the House during its budget session every year.

Motions and resolutions

Among other kinds of business that come up before the House are resolutions and motions. Resolutions and motions may be brought forward by the government or by individual members. The government may move a resolution or a motion for obtaining the sanction to a scheme or opinion of the house on an important matter of policy or a grave situation. Similarly, an individual member may move a resolution or motion to draw the attention of the house and the government to a particular problem. The last two and half hours of sitting every Friday are generally allotted for the transaction of individual members' business. While private members' bills are taken up on one Friday, private members' resolutions are taken up on the succeeding Friday, and so on.

Parliamentary committees

Most of the business of drafting a bill or amendments is initially discussed and debated in the parliamentary committees. Since the time for legislation is limited, the work of all departments of the government and any special focus tasks are delegated to the committees, wherein the committees shall prepare the initial draft of the bill/amendment for consideration by both the houses. They consist of members of both houses.

There are primarily two kinds of parliamentary committees based on their nature:-

  • Parliament Standing Committees (PSC) – Permanent in nature, reconstituted from time to time with every new election.
    • Department based
    • Others
  • Ad hoc committees – Created for a specific purpose and ceases to exist when that purpose is achieved.

Half-an-Hour discussion

A half-an-hour discussion can be raised on a matter of sufficient public importance which has been the subject of a recent question in Lok Sabha irrespective of the fact whether the question was answered orally or the answer was laid on theTable of the House and the answer which needs elucidation on a matter of fact. Normally not more than half an hour is allowed for such a discussion. Usually, the half-an-hour discussion is listed on Mondays, Wednesdays, and Fridays only. In one session, a member is allowed to raise not more than two half-hour discussions. During the discussion, the member, who has given notice, makes a short statement, and not more than four members, who have intimated earlier and have secured one of the four places on the ballot, are permitted to ask a question each for further elucidating any matter of fact. Thereafter, the minister makes replies. There is no formal motion before the house nor voting.

Discussion on matters of urgent public importance

Members may raise discussions on matters of urgent public importance with the permission of the Speaker. Such discussions may take place two days a week. No formal motion is moved in the House nor is there any voting on such a discussion.

Debate in the House

After the member who initiates discussion on an item of business has spoken, other members can speak on that item of business in such order as the Speaker may call upon them. Only one member can speak at a time and all speeches are directed to the chair. A matter requiring the decision of the House is decided to employ a question put by the Speaker on a motion made by a member.

Division

A division is one of the forms in which the decision of the House is ascertained. Normally, when a motion is put to the House members for and against it indicate their opinion by saying "Aye" or "No" from their seats. The chair goes by the voices and declares that the motion is either accepted or rejected by the House. If a member challenges the decision, the chair orders that the lobbies be cleared. Then the division bell is rung and an entire network of bells installed in the various parts and rooms in Parliament House and Parliament House Annexe rings continuously for three and a half minutes. Members and Ministers rush to the Chamber from all sides. After the bell stops, all the doors to the Chamber are closed and nobody can enter or leave the Chamber till the division is over. Then the chair puts the question for a second time and declares whether in its opinion the "Ayes" or the "Noes", have it. If the opinion so declared is again challenged, the chair asks the votes to be recorded by operating the Automatic Vote Recording Equipment.

Automatic vote recording system

With the announcement of the Speaker for recording the votes, theSecretary-General of the Lok Sabha presses the button of a keyboard. Then a gong sounds, serving as a signal to members for casting their votes. To vote, each member present in the chamber has to flip a switch and then operate one of the three pushbuttons fixed in their seat. The push switch must be kept pressed simultaneously until the gong sounds for the second time after 10 seconds. There are two indicator boards installed in the wall on either side of the Speaker's chair in the chamber. Each vote cast by a member is flashed here. Immediately after the votes are cast, they are totalled mechanically and the details of the results are flashed on the result indicator boards installed in the railings of the Speakers and diplomatic galleries.

Divisions are normally held with the aid of automatic vote recording equipment. Where so directed by the Speaker in terms of the relevant provision in the Rules of Procedure etc. In the Lok Sabha, divisions may be held either by the distribution of 'Aye'/'No' and 'Abstention' slips to members in the House or by the members recording their votes by going into the lobbies. There is an indicator board in the machine room showing the name of each member. The result of the division and vote cast by each member with the aid of automatic vote recording equipment also appear on this board and immediately a photograph of the indicator board is taken. Later the photograph is enlarged and the names of members who voted 'Ayes' and for 'Noes' are determined with the help of the photograph and incorporated in Lok Sabha debates.

Publication of debates

Three versions of Lok Sabha debates are prepared: the Hindi version, the English version, and the original version. Only the Hindi and English versions are printed. The original version, in cyclostyled form, is kept in the Parliament Library for record and reference. The Hindi version contains proceedings (all questions asked and answers are given thereto and speeches made) in Hindi and verbatim Hindi translation of proceedings in English or regional languages. The English version contains proceedings in English and the English translation of the proceedings take place in Hindi or any regional language. The original version, however, contains proceedings in Hindi or English as they actually took place in the House and also the English/Hindi translation of speeches made in regional languages.

If conflicting legislation is enacted by the two Houses, ajoint sitting is held to resolve the differences. In such a session, the members of the Lok Sabha would generally prevail, since the Lok Sabha includes more than twice as many members as the Rajya Sabha.

Officers of Lok Sabha

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Speaker and Deputy Speaker

As perArticle 93 of the Indian Constitution, the Lok Sabha has aSpeaker and aDeputy Speaker. In the Lok Sabha, both presiding officers — the Speaker and the Deputy Speaker — are elected from among its members by a simple majority of members present and voting in the House. No specific qualifications are prescribed for being elected Speaker; the Constitution only requires that Speaker should be a member of the House. But an understanding of the Constitution and the laws of the country and the rules of procedure and conventions of Parliament is considered a major asset for the holder of the office of the Speaker. Vacation and resignation of, and removal from, the offices of Speaker and Deputy Speaker are mentioned under Article 94 of the Constitution of India. As perArticle 94 of the Indian Constitution, a Speaker or a Deputy Speaker should vacate their office, a) if they cease to be a member of the House of the People, b) they resign, or c) is removed from office by a resolution of the House passed by a majority.

The Speaker of Lok Sabha is both a member of the House and its Presiding Officer. The Speaker conducts the business in the House. They decide whether a bill is a money bill or not. They maintain discipline and decorum in the house and can punish a member for their unruly behaviour by suspending them. They permit the moving of various kinds of motions and resolutions like the motion of no confidence,motion of adjournment,motion of censure and calling attention notice as per the rules. The Speaker decides on the agenda to be taken up for discussion during the meeting. It is the Speaker of the Lok Sabha who presides over joint sittings called in the event of disagreement between the two Houses on a legislative measure. Following the 52nd Constitution amendment, the Speaker is vested with the power relating to the disqualification of a member of the Lok Sabha on grounds of defection. The Speaker makes obituary references in the House, formal references to important national and international events, and the valedictory address after every Session of the Lok Sabha and also when the term of the House expires. Though a member of the House, the Speaker does not vote in the House except on those rare occasions when there is a tie at the end of a decision. To date, the Speaker of the Lok Sabha has not been called upon to exercise this unique casting vote. While the office of Speaker is vacant due to absence/resignation/removal, the duties of the office are performed by the Deputy Speaker or, if the office of Deputy Speaker is also vacant, by such member of the House of the People as the President may appoint for the purpose. The Lok Sabha has also a separate non-elected Secretariat staff.[23]

ShriG. V. Mavalankar was the first Speaker of Lok Sabha (15 May 1952 – 27 February 1956) and ShriM. Ananthasayanam Ayyangar was the first Deputy Speaker (30 May 1952 – 7 March 1956). In the 17th Lok Sabha,Om Birla is the current Speaker.[24]

Secretariat

The Secretariat of Lok Sabha was set up according to the provisions contained in Article 98 of the Constitution. The said Article, which provides for a separate secretarial staff for each House of Parliament, reads as follows:- 98. Secretariat of Parliament – Each House of Parliament shall have a separate secretarial staff: Provided that nothing in this clause shall be construed as preventing the creation of posts common to both Houses of Parliament. (2) Parliament may by law regulate the recruitment and the conditions of service of persons appointed to the secretarial staff of either House of Parliament.[25]

The Lok Sabha Secretariat functions under the overall guidance and control of the Speaker. The main activities of the Secretariatinter alia include the following:

(i) providing secretarial assistance and support to the effective functioning of the House of the People (Lok Sabha) possible to Members of Lok Sabha; (ii) providing amenities as admissible to Members of Lok Sabha; (iii) servicing the various Parliamentary Committees; (iv) preparing research and reference material and bringing out various publications; (v) recruitment of manpower in the Lok Sabha Secretariat and attending to personnel matters; & (vi) preparing and publishing a record of the day-to-day proceedings of the Lok Sabha and bringing out such other publications, as may be required concerning the functioning of the Lok Sabha and its Committees, among other things.

In the discharge of his constitutional and statutory responsibilities, the Speaker of the Lok Sabha is assisted by the Secretary-General, who holds the rank equivalent to the Cabinet Secretary to the Government of India. The Secretary-General, in turn, is assisted by senior functionaries at the level of Secretary, Additional Secretary, Joint Secretary and other officers and staff of the Secretariat.[26] Since November 2020, the Secretary-General of Lok Sabha is Utpal Kumar Singh,IAS.[27]

Lok Sabha general elections

Main article:List of Indian general elections

Each Lok Sabha is constituted after ageneral election:

Lok SabhaGeneral Election
1st Lok Sabha1951–52 Indian general election
2nd Lok Sabha1957 Indian general election
3rd Lok Sabha1962 Indian general election
4th Lok Sabha1967 Indian general election
5th Lok Sabha1971 Indian general election
6th Lok Sabha1977 Indian general election
7th Lok Sabha1980 Indian general election
8th Lok Sabha1984 Indian general election
9th Lok Sabha1989 Indian general election
10th Lok Sabha1991 Indian general election
11th Lok Sabha1996 Indian general election
12th Lok Sabha1998 Indian general election
13th Lok Sabha1999 Indian general election
14th Lok Sabha2004 Indian general election
15th Lok Sabha2009 Indian general election
16th Lok Sabha2014 Indian general election
17th Lok Sabha2019 Indian general election
18th Lok Sabha2024 Indian general election

Statewise representation

Main article:List of constituencies of the Lok Sabha

As of 26 January 2020, the Lok Sabha is composed of 543 members[28] made up of up to 524 members representing the people of28 states and 19 members representing people of8 Union territories based on their population. While maximum seats can now go up to 550 even though maximum size of the Lok Sabha as outlined in theConstitution of India, at its commencement, was 552 members because after The Constitution (One Hundred and Fourth Amendment) Act, 2019, Article 334 (b) of the Constitution of India was maintained at seventy years. See the table below for details:

State/ UT*Seats[29]
Andaman and Nicobar Islands*1
Andhra Pradesh25
Arunachal Pradesh2
Assam14
Bihar40
Chandigarh*1
Chhattisgarh11
Dadra and Nagar Haveli and Daman and Diu*2
Delhi (NCT)*7
Goa2
Gujarat26
Haryana10
Himachal Pradesh4
Jammu and Kashmir*5
Jharkhand14
Karnataka28
Kerala20
Ladakh*1
Lakshadweep*1
Madhya Pradesh29
Maharashtra48
Manipur2
Meghalaya2
Mizoram1
Nagaland1
Odisha21
Puducherry*1
Punjab13
Rajasthan25
Sikkim1
Tamil Nadu39
Telangana17
Tripura2
Uttarakhand5
Uttar Pradesh80
West Bengal42
Total543

Membership by party

Main article:List of members of the 18th Lok Sabha

No. of Lok Sabha MP's party-wise:

As of 13 August 2025
AlliancePartyNo. of MPsLeader of the Party
Government
NDA
Seats:293
BJP240Narendra Modi
(Leader of the House)
TDP16Lavu Sri Krishna Devarayalu
JD(U)12Dileshwar Kamait
SHS7Shrikant Shinde
LJP(RV)5Chirag Paswan
JD(S)2M. Mallesh Babu
JSP2Vallabhaneni Balashowry
RLD2Rajkumar Sangwan
AD(S)1Anupriya Patel
AGP1Phani Bhusan Choudhury
AJSU1Chandra Prakash Choudhary
HAM(S)1Jitan Ram Manjhi
NCP1Sunil Tatkare
SKM1Indra Hang Subba
UPPL1Joyanta Basumatary
INDIA
Seats:234
INC99Rahul Gandhi
(Leader of the Opposition)
SP37Akhilesh Yadav
AITC28Abhishek Banerjee
DMK22T. R. Baalu
SS(UBT)9Arvind Sawant
NCP-SP8Supriya Sule
CPI(M)4K. Radhakrishnan
RJD4Abhay Kumar Sinha
IUML3E. T. Mohammed Basheer
JMM3Joba Majhi
CPI2K. Subbarayan
CPI(ML)L2Raja Ram Singh
JKNC2Mian Altaf Ahmed
VCK2Thol. Thirumavalavan
BAP1Rajkumar Roat
KEC1Francis George
MDMK1Durai Vaiko
RLP1Hanuman Beniwal
RSP1N. K. Premachandran
VPP1Ricky AJ Syngkon
Independent3
Unaligned
Seats:15
YSRCP4P. V. Midhun Reddy
AAP3Gurmeet Singh Meet Hayer
AIMIM1Asaduddin Owaisi
ASP(KR)1Chandrashekhar Azad
SAD1Harsimrat Kaur Badal
ZPM1Richard Vanlalhmangaiha
Independent4
Vacant1
Total543

See also

Further reading

  • Sen, Ronojoy (2022).House of the People: Parliament and the Making of Indian Democracy. Cambridge University Press.

References

Notes

Citations

  1. ^"Lok Sabha".Lok Sabha.Archived from the original on 31 May 2022. Retrieved12 February 2022.
  2. ^"Anglo Indian Representation To Lok Sabha, State Assemblies Done Away; SC-ST Reservation Extended For 10 Years: Constitution (104th Amendment) Act To Come Into Force On 25th Jan".Live law. 23 January 2020.Archived from the original on 12 November 2020. Retrieved25 January 2020.
  3. ^"The Constitution (One hundred and fourth amendment) Act, 2019"(PDF).The Gazette of India Extraordinary. 21 January 2020. Retrieved1 June 2025.
  4. ^Shankar, B.L.; Rodrigues, Valerian (13 January 2011).The Lok Sabha and the Rajya Sabha. The Indian Parliament. Oxford University Press. pp. 292–328.doi:10.1093/acprof:oso/9780198067726.003.0008.ISBN 978-0-19-806772-6.Archived from the original on 13 April 2020. Retrieved12 February 2022.
  5. ^"Parliament of India: Lok Sabha".Parliament of India. Archived fromthe original on 1 June 2015. Retrieved1 June 2015.
  6. ^"Part V—The Union. Article 83"(PDF).Government of India. p. 40. Archived fromthe original(PDF) on 24 January 2013. Retrieved1 June 2013.
  7. ^"PM Modi's New Cabinet Could See Prestige Posts For Smriti Irani, Bengal".NDTV.Archived from the original on 24 May 2019. Retrieved24 May 2019.
  8. ^"Sansad TV Live".Sansad TV.Archived from the original on 24 June 2023. Retrieved24 June 2023.
  9. ^"A decade from now, three states will contribute a third of Lok Sabha MPs". 6 May 2016.Archived from the original on 8 May 2016.
  10. ^"Electoral system".Election Commission of India. Archived fromthe original on 5 January 2007.
  11. ^"Indian Freedom Struggle (1857–1947) – Culture and Heritage – Know India: National Portal of India".Archived from the original on 22 July 2013.
  12. ^The Journal of Parliamentary Information, Volume 46 (2000), pg. 400
  13. ^"Government of India Act of 1935 – Dictionary definition of Government of India Act of 1935".encyclopedia.com.Archived from the original on 12 June 2018. Retrieved10 May 2018.
  14. ^Part V—The Union. Article 79. p. 38Archived 24 January 2013 at theWayback Machine
  15. ^"How India pulled off its first general election".The Indian Express. 12 April 2024. Retrieved14 April 2024.
  16. ^"Ministry of Parliamentary Affairs: Cabinet approves dissolution of the Sixteenth Lok Sabha".Press Information Bureau. New Delhi: Government of India. 24 May 2019. Retrieved21 September 2025.
  17. ^"Ministry of Parliamentary Affairs: Cabinet approves Summoning of Parliament after General Election, 2019".Press Information Bureau. New Delhi: Government of India. 31 May 2019. Retrieved21 September 2025.
  18. ^"Ministry of Parliamentary Affairs: Press Communique".Press Information Bureau. New Delhi: Government of India. 5 June 2024. Retrieved21 September 2025.
  19. ^"Ministry of Parliamentary Affairs: First Session of 18th Lok Sabha to be Held from 24th June to 3rd July, 2024".Press Information Bureau. New Delhi: Government of India. 12 June 2024. Retrieved21 September 2025.
  20. ^Part V—The Union. Article 81. p. 41Archived 24 January 2013 at theWayback Machine
  21. ^Part V—The Union. Article 81. pp. 46, 47Archived 24 January 2013 at theWayback Machine
  22. ^ab"The Constitution of India"(PDF).india.gov.in. Archived fromthe original(PDF) on 28 March 2021.
  23. ^"Lok Sabha". Lok Sabha. Archived fromthe original on 30 May 2013.
  24. ^"Om Birla unanimously elected Lok Sabha Speaker, PM Modi heaps praises on BJP colleague".India Today. 19 June 2019.Archived from the original on 20 June 2019. Retrieved27 June 2019.
  25. ^"Secretariat- as in Constitution".Archived from the original on 4 June 2019. Retrieved24 May 2019.
  26. ^"Set-up of the Secretariat".Archived from the original on 14 May 2019. Retrieved24 May 2019.
  27. ^PTI (30 November 2020)."Senior IAS Officer Utpal Kumar Singh Appointed Lok Sabha Secretary General".NDTV.Archived from the original on 27 January 2021. Retrieved4 February 2021.
  28. ^"Members : Lok Sabha".Archived from the original on 13 November 2019. Retrieved25 December 2019.
  29. ^"Lok Sabha Introduction". National Informatics Centre, Government of India.Archived from the original on 1 December 2008. Retrieved22 September 2008.

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